2016 Election Day by the numbers

Clinton supporters left shocked after stunning defeat

Republicans are not the only political party to have negative rhetoric towards women. Following offensive statements from Bernie Sanders supporters after Hillary Clinton's victory in Nevada and a former Pennsylvania governor talking about America’s “ugly women,” Democrats are not exactly looking like the “party for women” this election cycle.

Republicans are not the only political party to have negative rhetoric towards women. Following offensive statements from Bernie Sanders supporters after Hillary Clinton's victory in Nevada and a former Pennsylvania governor talking about America’s “ugly women,” Democrats are not exactly looking like the “party for women” this election cycle.

War on women has a Democratic front, too

At first glance, you might think the Democrats would have their easiest time ever of accusing the Republicans of waging a war on women, with Donald Trump at the top of the Republican ticket.

But there are three powerful reminders this week that the Democrats have plenty of problems of their own.

First, former Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell, former chair of the Democratic National Committee and prominent supporter of Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign, explained that Trump will have trouble with women at the polls because there are “more ugly women in America than attractive women.”

Then supporters of Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders unleashed a jarring stream of vulgar, sexist attacks on the chairwoman of the Nevada Democratic Party after Sanders got bested in delegates by Clinton.

Now Sanders’ campaign is engaged in a war of words with current DNC chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz, accusing her of being in the tank for Clinton.

And, finally, Trump served notice that whenever Clinton and other Democrats slam him for objectifying women, Trump will hit back at Bill Clinton, as he did in a television interview Wednesday, accusing the former president of rape.

So if there’s a war over the war on women, it will definitely be waged by and against both major parties.

“Sexism is not limited to one political party or the other,” said Susan Carroll, a professor of political science and women’s and gender studies at New Jersey’s Rutgers University. “It clearly manifests itself across the political spectrum.”

And Democrats gave two prime examples this week. Rendell, in an interview with The Washington Post, said Trump’s comments about women will backfire on him because “There are probably more ugly women in America than attractive women.”

It derails the Democratic campaign, having to deal with the comments and tweets from Donald Trump about the comments.

Rutgers University Professor Susan Carroll on sexist remarks

He apologized for the remark Wednesday. “What I said was incredibly stupid and insensitive,” he told reporters in Philadelphia. “When I read it in the article I said, ‘Did I say that? It was just dumb, and stupid, and insensitive, and if I offended anyone, I apologize.”

Sanders supporters, riled up after a melee during at a state Democratic Party meeting in Nevada, unleashed a torrent of hateful, sexist, emails and voicemails toward state Democratic Party chair Roberta Lange, much of it unprintable.

This isn’t what Democrats had in mind for 2016. They envisioned an easy time winning the women’s vote, thanks to Trump’s feud with Fox News host Megyn Kelly and some of the off-color comments and he’s made about women, including Clinton, Rosie O’Donnell, former Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina, and Heidi Cruz, wife of Sen. Ted Cruz.

They’ve been hoping for a reprise of their 2012 claim that Republicans were waging a “War Against Women,” launched after two GOP Senate candidates made controversial comments about women and rape.

And polls do consistently show that Trump has a major problem with women voters. A CNN/ORC poll in March showed that 73 percent of registered women voters had an unfavorable view of Trump, up from a 59 percent negative view in December.

But Trump believes that Clinton has a problem with women voters as well, especially millennial women. He has attacked Clinton, accusing her of playing the “women card” and being an “enabler” of her husband’s infidelities.

He vowed that if she goes after him on women, he’ll aggressively respond, using former President Clinton’s sex scandals as ammunition.

How do you compare that against Clinton — OK, what has Clinton done?

Donald Trump on Fox’s ‘Hannity’ discussing a New York Times story about his treatment of women